ISE II - Task 3 - R - CA2 (Endangered Animals)
ISE II - Task 3 - R - CA2 (Endangered Animals)
Procedure
Preparation
1. Copy one study worksheet per student.
2. Find pictures of a leopard, a blue whale and an elephant.
following websites are useful:
The
http://www.defenders.org/elephant/basic-facts
http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/leopard/
https://www.worldwildlife.org/species/blue-whale)
In class
1. Explain to the students that todays lesson is preparation for Task 3
Reading into writing for the ISE II Reading & Writing exam. Write
Endangered Animals on the board and elicit what this means and
ask which animals the class thinks are endangered? Put some ideas
Extension activity
More advanced students can check all the new vocabulary in the reading
texts.
Further support activity
Less able students can write about the animal they support. They do not
need to write about why they dont support other animals.
After class
Look on the internet to find one other endangered animal. Write a
paragraph of between 130-150 words about its habitat, what it eats, if/
how it communicates and two more interesting facts about it. Write
about whether you think your school/work-place or local community
should support a charity for this animal.
Student Worksheet
Task 3 Reading into Writing:
Endangered Animals
Task 1
Read the questions below. Then read the texts below and find the
answers. If there is no information given, put NI (No
Information).
1. What different ways of communicating do blue whales and elephants
have?
2. People are mentioned in relation to leopards and elephants. What are
the differences in these relations?
3. Which of these endangered animals like to live in groups and which do
not?
4. How are the endangered animals different in what they eat?
5. What different habitats are mentioned?
Check your answers with your partner.
Leopards are graceful and powerful big cats closely related to lions, tigers,
and jaguars. The leopard is so strong and comfortable in trees that it
often pulls what its kills up into the trees. Leopards can also hunt from
trees, where their spotted coats look like leaves. They hunt at night and
go after other animals like antelope, deer, and pigs, hiding and walking
slowly and silently in tall grass. When human settlements are present,
leopards often attack dogs and, occasionally, people.
Leopards are strong swimmers and happy in water, where they
sometimes eat fish or crabs. They live in Africa, Asia, India and China.
Text 2
Blue Whale
POPULATION 10,000-25,000 individuals
SCIENTIFIC NAME Balaenoptera musculus
WEIGHT Close to 200 tons
LENGTH 80-100 feet
HABITATS Oceans
The blue whale is the largest animal on the planet, weighing as much as
200 tons (approximately 33 elephants). The blue whale has a heart the
size of a Volkswagen Beetle. Its stomach can hold one ton of krill and it
needs to eat about four tons of krill each day. They are the loudest
animals on Earth and are even louder than a jet engine. Their calls reach
188 decibels, while a jet reaches 140 decibels. Their low frequency
whistle can be heard for hundreds of miles and is probably used to attract
other blue whales.
PLACES Southern Chile, Gulf of California, Coral Triangle
HABITATS
Ocean Habitat
GIANT PANDAS
The giant panda has a huge appetite for bamboo. Pandas will sometimes
eat birds or rodents as well.
Wild pandas live only in remote, mountainous regions in central China.
These high bamboo forests are cool and wetjust as pandas like it. Giant
pandas like to live alone. They have a highly developed sense of smell.
There are only about 1,000 giant pandas left in the wild. Perhaps 100
pandas live in zoos, where they are always among the most popular
attractions. Much of what we know about pandas comes from the study of
these zoo animals, because there are so few of their wild cousins.
Text 4
ELEPHANTS
Habitat loss
Human contact
Behaviour
New discovery
to support
not in favour of
Id rather we
because
support
reason
the largest
prefer
-
need
rare
believe
should
wouldnt
Answer Key
Task 1
1. Elephants and blue whales can communicate over long distances.
Elephants get messages through their feet and trunks. Blue whales
have a very, very loud call and a whistle.
2. Leopards sometimes kill people in settlements. People are taking over
elephants habitats and poaching ivory.
3. Giant pandas like to live alone. Elephants live in groups (herds).
4. Leopards eat antelope, deer, pigs, sometimes dogs and people, crabs
and fish; blue whales eat krill; giant pandas eat bamboo, birds or
rodents; elephants -no information given
5. Trees (leopard)/ ocean habitat (Blue whales)/ mountains/ bamboo
forests (giant pandas) / elephant habitats will become hotter and
drier.
Task 2
1. Id prefer
2. to support
3. Id rather we
4. believe. should
5. because. the largest
6. reasonrare
7. due to the fact that
8. wouldnt
9. not in favour of..need
Model Answer
NEW EMAIL
To: Charity Committee
From: Barbara Plum
Subject: Charity Choice
Dear Charity Committee,
Id prefer to support a Charity for Leopards. Leopards are amazing and
beautiful animals. They can run extremely fast, are wonderful hunters and
manage to catch smaller animals by hiding in the trees at night. They are
powerful. Id rather support leopards because they are related to animals
like lions and tigers and only sometimes hurt people. They can survive in
water and eat fish, so I think it is easy to help them.
I am not in favour of supporting a charity for Giant Pandas or Elephants
due to the fact that Giant Pandas and Elephants get a lot of publicity in
the world. There are many charities for Elephants and Pandas and zoos
look after pandas and many people go to the zoo and give money for
pandas. I wouldnt support Blue Whales because they eat tons of krill and
this means that other ocean animals have less food.
With best wishes,
Barbara Plum
Original Sources:
http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/leopard/
https://www.worldwildlife.org/species/blue-whale)
http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/giant-panda/
http://www.defenders.org/elephant/basic-facts